LONDON -- A new, free magazine called Swipe wants to appeal to millennials by bringing the Internet world into a print format.
Billing itself as "The best of the Internet in print," Swipe curates articles and photos from online media partners and prints them as a news and lifestyle magazine.
{ cardId: 39383}Launching a print publication is certainly an interesting choice as it's tough times for print media in the UK at the moment. Trinity Mirror's New Day newspaper folded after just nine weeks due to poor sales. The Independent published its last print issue at the end of March and moved to online only.
London has a fair few free print publications that are distributed to commuters, including newspapers Metro, City A.M. and The Evening Standard. Both Time Out and NME have switched from pay models to free distribution over the last few years.
The young team at Swipe (everyone in the office team is under 30, according to Editor-in-Chief Barney Guiton) thinks that they can bring something different to the medium.
“Print is far from dead but it has failed to innovate in the face of online publishing. We offer the quality and variety of the web but in print, which is still the most popular medium to read in," publisher Tom Rendell said in a news release.
{ cardId: 39402}Swipe has over 70 partner sites and is also always on the lookout for new sites or blogs, Guiton told Mashable. Swipe pays the sites about 10-15 U.S. cents per published word and displays the sites' logo and Twitter handle along with articles.
"With user-generated sites like Medium, we speak to the author of the article to get their permission and arrange payment," Guiton said.
Swipe will initially be published fortnightly with a circulation of 20,000, distributed at Tube stations and certain offices and cafes that target a startup audience.
Mashablepicked up a copy of the magazine's first issue from Oxford Circus on Thursday. There's a "Trending" section, which prints tweets and memes like Dat Boi and the Chewbacca mask video. Articles include a story from Business Insider on "Austria's Donald Trump," an explainer from The Malcontent on a mural of Trump kissing Vladimir Putin and a feature from Vocativ on sexual fetishes about size.
Tweet may have been deleted
There's sponsored content from Uber and Makers Academy and ads for craft beer delivery and cold-pressed juice drinks.
Swipe isn't hosting content on their website but has a social media presence.
Initial reception has been positive, Guiton said, with people saying they hadn't seen many of the articles and the content was more long-form than other free magazines.
It's an interesting experiment and it remains to see how it will work out.
Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
New magazine turns the 'best of the Internet' into print-燕尔新婚网
sitemap
文章
7657
浏览
282
获赞
911
CPU and GPU Availability and Pricing Update: March 2021
CPU and graphics card pricing and availability are still a mess, but is the situation improving? CanTikTok says it's not going anywhere after Trump promised a ban
TikTok said Saturday it has no plans to leave the U.S.Of course it may not be totally up to the compMan redesigns iPhone home screen in the style of MS Paint, with glorious results
Microsoft Paint truly is the gift that keeps on giving.Nowadays, with the likes of Adobe IllustratorSoulCycle's at
This is going to sound obvious but I'm going to say it anyway: SoulCycle's at-home spinning bike wouWhat is Parler? Everything you need to know about the conservative social network.
UPDATE: Jan. 8, 2021, 6:47 p.m. PST Parler has been removed from Google's Play Store for not havingChromecasts aren't the best streaming gift for everyone
It's getting harder and harder to find people who don't at least occasionallyuse streaming services,Sex workers fear targeting under Instagram's terms of service
Normally when a social network updates its terms of service, barely anyone notices. But that's not tFacebook created a facial
In case we needed another reminder of Facebook's mass surveillance capabilities, we now know the comZoom adds two
Many of us have come to rely on Zoom video calls as a way of interacting with friends and family saf15 of the best animal photos from 2020
It's stunning to see wild animals up close — especially when they're caught in the beauty of tSamsung's upcoming Galaxy S20 line leaked in full detail
We're less than a month out from Samsung officiallyunveiling its new flagship phones, which naturallWhy learn a foreign language when Google Assistant can speak it for you?
Regardless of how many sessions I complete on Duolingo prior to a trip overseas, I blank the minuteRobocalls, WeChat messages, and more spread misinformation on Election Day
It's Nov. 3, Election Day, and you know what that means: Misinformation will be flooding the interneThese wildlife photography finalists will take your breath away
Nature is a beautiful, brutal place.The 16 "highly commended" entries in the Wildlife Photographer oReport: Grindr, OkCupid send your private data to third
When it comes to apps and privacy, it's nearly always worse than you think. That sad truth was once